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Table of Contents

Cover/Copyright Introduction Chapter 1: In the Beginning Chapter 2: Starting Strong Chapter 3: Thunderstruck Chapter 4: No-Brainer Chapter 5: The Odd Couple Chapter 6: Defense and Offense Chapter 7: This is the End, Beautiful Friend, the End Chapter 8: The Gathering Clouds Chapter 9: The Silver Lining Chapter 10: Childhood's End Chapter 11: With a Little Help from My Friends Chapter 12: FNG Chapter 13: Home Chapter 14: Scapegoat Chapter 15: Space Available Chapter 16: Friends Chapter 17: Destiny Chapter 18: The Dogs of War Chapter 19: Until We Meet Again Chapter 20: Take the Long Way Home Chapter 21: A Brief Detour Chapter 22: Reconnecting Chapter 23: Summer of Love Chapter 24: Back to School Chapter 25: Behind the Scenes Chapter 26: FNG Again Chapter 27: Summertime Livin' Chapter 28: Agents of Change Chapter 29: Agents of Change II Chapter 30: Escape Plan Chapter 31: Eastbound Chapter 32: Starting Again Chapter 33: Actions Chapter 34: Reactions Chapter 35: Family Matters Chapter 36: Getting to Know You Chapter 37: Meeting the Family Chapter 38: Transitions Chapter 39: Transitions, Part II Chapter 40: Together Chapter 41: Union and Reunion Chapter 42: Standby to Standby Chapter 43: New Arrivals Chapter 44: Pasts, Presents and Futures Chapter 45: Adding On Chapter 46: New Beginnings Chapter 47: Light and Darkness Chapter 48: Plans Chapter 49: Within the Five Percent Chapter 50: Decompression Chapter 51: Decompression, Part II Chapter 52: Transitions, Part III Chapter 53: TBD Chapter 54: Into the Sunset

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Chapter 42: Standby to Standby

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10 July 1996 - Spokane International Airport, Spokane, Washington

The small regional jet touched down with the slightest squeak of tires, delivering Keiko Knox to her hometown with her new husband. Keiko walked hand-in-hand with Jeff across the tarmac of Spokane International; she spun his wedding band around his finger while they did, causing him to smile at her. Keiko exchanged extended hugs with her parents when they emerged from their gate.

“Hello, Mother, Father.”

“Keiko, Jeff,” Hiro said, overcome with emotion, “you have given me a gift beyond measure. I do not know how to thank you.”

“Have you called Japan yet, Father?”

Hiro nodded. “I called the night you met Isao and his family; eight at night here is noontime tomorrow there. I spoke to Ichiro for nearly three hours. I might need to take out a loan to pay for that phone bill.”

“The call? Did it go alright?”

“Your uncle cried as hard as I did, Keiko. I ... I have my family back, my brothers and my sister. All are still alive, all have children and grandchildren. You have cousins, Keiko, many cousins. Your mother and I will travel to Japan for the first time in three and a half decades and do so without any trepidation.”

“When will you be going?”

“Sometime in September or October. Jeff, you have been very quiet.”

“I’m still trying to wrap my head around this, Hiro. Not having all of my cousins around? I’m shuddering at the thought. I don’t know how you kept from calling your brother the second you hung up with us.”

“I almost did. I was able to wait an hour while Mayumi and I let our excitement ease slightly.”

“And what about you, Mayumi? Neither Ken nor Keiko have ever said anything about your family; is there any chance for a similar reunion with your brothers or sisters?”

Mayumi and Hiro shared a sorrowful glance. “No, Jeff. Of our two fathers, mine was the most ... vitriolic. I could never forgive what he said about Hiro, even after all this time. I was also an only child, unusual then but it did occur. I was never close to my cousins, so I have no burning need to contact them. Hiro’s brothers and sister, though reserved, welcomed me then; to reunite with them will be enough.”

“I’m sorry, Mayumi, I didn’t mean to tear open old wounds.”

“You did not, Jeff,” she assured him, placing her hand on his arm. “Even without your family or Hiro’s, you, Keiko and Hiro would be all the family I need now.”


I don’t know why I thought this would get easier with time, Jeff thought while he and Keiko approached Ken’s grave; she squeezed his hand in a vice-like grip as they walked closer and closer.

The flags he’d left for Ken were long gone, not that he expected them to be there after five years. In their place was a bronze VFW “U.S. Veteran” flag holder and a larger American flag atop it which moved gently in the breeze. Jeff paid for the flags for Ken’s grave every year; he paid to replace missing or damaged holders whenever necessary. He made sure both were standing straight.

Keiko wept softly while she whispered in Japanese to her brother’s grave. Jeff made the effort not to listen to what she was telling Ken as she crouched. His mind was a jumble as he stared at the headstone.

KENJI
ISOROKU
TAKAHASHI

SGT
USA

PANAMA
PERSIAN GULF

MAR 15 1968
FEB 28 1991

BSM W/V
PH & OLC

The inscription didn’t scratch the surface of what Ken meant to his family, and to him. That he owed Ken everything was never more true than now; he glanced down at his left hand and the gold band on his ring finger. Keiko continued to talk to her brother while Jeff put a comforting hand on her left shoulder. Her left hand came up to cover his right while she talked. After a moment she stopped and smiled up at her husband. Jeff gathered her into a hug mirroring the one they’d shared here five years earlier.

“Are you ready to go?” she asked him after a few minutes. He nodded to her.

The cemetery’s groundskeeper did a double take when he noticed the wedding invitation and unopened beer bottle leaning against the stone hours later.


A piercing whistle cut through the air behind home plate as Keiko cheered another Tim Wakefield strikeout; Jeff smiled at his wife’s exuberance.

“This is a side of Keiko you don’t usually see,” Sean Brophy muttered to his friend.

“Not in public, anyway,” Jeff replied with a smile.

“TMI, buddy! TMI!”

“It’s not my fault if the magic’s gone between you and Beth.”

“You try having a one year-old with another on the way and then come talk to me. We’re both too exhausted for any ‘magic’ right now.”

“You know they know what causes that, right?”

“You know I’ve told you not to quit your night job, right?”

“I get to work days now, remember?”

“Yeah, about that...”

“Oh, you funny-funny, Boss Man.”

“Your bride’s not going to kick your posterior for that mocking Asian accent?”

“Yeah, but I like it rough.”

“Again with the TMI!”

“How’s life on the inside? You miss those car accidents on the highway at three a.m. in the middle of winter yet?”

“You mean instead of being snuggled up to my wife in our nice, warm bed? Yeah, lemme get back to you on that. I don’t miss ninety-five degree days in ambulances without working a/c, either. I’ll risk all those paper cuts in the office instead, thanks.”

“It’s going on a year since you left the road; how’s it going, seriously?”

“I think I’m finally in the groove with the admin stuff, kinda like when I started to really settle into EMS in general about six months after we started working together. It’s definitely different. You can’t just focus on the problem in front of you; you have to continue to think about the big picture all the time.”

“And long-term.”

“Right. Dad says I’m getting close to being ready to leave the nest.”

“Running a new division on your own, or making decisions on your own in general?”

“Decisions in general. I’ve got an idea for a new division for Brophy, but it’s only a vague concept right now.”

“Which is... ?”

“Not ready for prime-time. Sorry, bud. When I flesh out my idea a bit more I know I’ll want your help but I’m not quite to that point yet.”

“It’s okay,” Jeff sniffed while he pretended to wipe tears from his eyes. “You don’t trust me. It’s fine.”

“I trust you’ll eventually stop with the jokes?”


“Your forms are continuing to improve, Jeffrey. Your flexibility has improved since last year and that is helping your karate performance.”

“Thanks. It feels more fluid, more natural, now. When I was in paramedic school there was a point when my IV starts began to feel the same way; one of my instructors told me it was my muscle memory catching up. I’m guessing the forms have taken this long to feel natural because my flexibility has been changing to this point. Now that my muscles are used to being this flexible they’ve finally become used to the motions.”

“Whatever the explanation, your skills are also improving. I estimate you will attain your black belt in another year or two. Your previous work in high school allowed you to progress rapidly through the lower belts to your current blue in only two years.”

“I’m guessing it’s time to test those skills this morning?”

“Yes, let us get our protective gear on.”


“I’ve only been a paramedic for eight months. You’re putting someone newer with me today?”

“Todd made it through his orientation period without a problem,” Lon Ferullo said. “He’s a little raw when it comes to his on-scene savvy; he’s got plenty of EMS experience time-wise, but I wonder how many calls he’s gotten in the small town he’s coming from. That being said his skills are right on the money and he seems like he’ll fit in well here. As for you, Jeff, I don’t think there’s been a new hire who’s shown us as quickly as you have how much of a leader he is. Your partners over the last three years can’t say enough good things about you, and that’s not even counting Sean Brophy or Mr. Brophy himself.”

“Alright, Lon, stop buttering me up or Keiko’s gonna get jealous. Where is this guy?”

“He’s out back already, checking out Twenty-seven.”

“Let’s go meet this wunderkind, then.”

Todd Riikonen, originally from rural North Dakota, was a student at Northeastern University who’d decided to stay in the Boston area after graduation. He’d put himself through paramedic school while working a full-time office job; he’d discovered he liked EMS more than his degree field and quit the office career.

Todd was personable and friendly; it didn’t take him long to be a favorite of staff at regular Brophy facilities. What Jeff saw of Todd’s skills bore out Lon’s assertion that his were good and he made his patients feel at ease. Still, there was a vague air of naïvité about him that put Jeff constantly on-guard.

One night in early August Jeff and Todd were covering Melrose because the paramedic truck normally assigned to that city was doing a call. They pulled up to a coffee shop down the street from the fire station.

“Do you want a coffee, Todd?”

“No, I’m good, thanks.”

Jeff began to slide out of the driver’s seat. “Paramedic Twenty-Seven?” the radio crackled.

“I guess I don’t want one, either,” Jeff muttered while he slid back in and picked up the mic. “Twenty-seven?”

“Twenty-seven, in Melrose, one sixty-three Essex Street. One-six-three Essex Street, second floor, for the domestic, unknown injuries. P-Twenty-seven?”

“Twenty-seven has one-six-three Essex, Melrose.”

“Twenty-seven, Melrose PD not on-scene at this time. Stage.”

“Twenty-seven copies: stage for police.”

Paramedic Twenty-seven made the five minute response to the area of the call. Jeff shut off the emergency lights and pulled to the curb a block away, out of sight of the address. Two minutes passed before a man walked towards them on the sidewalk.

“Heads-up, Todd.”

“Huh?”

“We’ve got someone walking up to us and we don’t know if the scene is safe. This guy could be involved or he could be out for a stroll, we don’t know.”

The man picked up his pace towards the ambulance; Jeff was relieved that the man kept his hands in view, but his senses were still heightened. The man stepped up to the passenger’s side window, which Todd rolled down.

“You guys need to get in there! I think he might kill them this time!”

“Who, sir?” Jeff asked.

“Steven, the guy in the upstairs apartment. He’s an angry drunk and takes it out on his kid and old lady a lot of the time.”

“What address?”

“One-sixty-three Essex Street, second floor. You gotta stop him! The kid sounds hurt!”

“Sir, we can’t go in there until we know the cops are there and have things under control. We can’t help anyone if we become this guy’s target, too.”

“Jeff, come on!” Todd protested. “We gotta go in there!”

“You have pepper spray?” he asked his partner. “What about a baton? A firearm? No, you don’t because the state prohibits EMS from carrying any of those. What do we always say at the beginning of every training scenario? ‘Scene safety!’”

“But, Jeff!”

“No buts! I wanna go home to my wife tonight. There’s nothing about this job worth our lives, Todd.” Jeff picked up the microphone to check on the status of Melrose Police. While he looked out the driver’s window to check behind the truck, Todd slipped out of the passenger’s side without a sound; he pulled open the side door of the ambulance, grabbed their large jump kit and ran down the street.

Jeff was stunned. He froze for a split-second before he tore open his door. He ran around the truck and closed all the doors Todd left wide open; by that time Todd was long gone. Jeff jumped back into the driver’s seat, hit the lights and dropped the transmission back into drive.

“Twenty-seven! Urgent traffic!” The truck shot from the curb when he stomped on the gas.

“Clear the air! All units, clear the air! Answering Paramedic Twenty-seven.”

“Step up Melrose Police if they’re not on arrival. My partner just jumped out of the truck and ran to the incident address! Start the on-duty supervisor!” The truck fishtailed around the corner.

“X-ray One responding.” The on-duty supervisor began responding before being hailed by dispatch.

“Paramedic Fourteen responding from Wakefield ER.” Fourteen was the normal Melrose truck; they were coming from the hospital they’d taken their patient to.

“Shit!” There were no police cars visible on-scene, no sign of Todd. Jeff slid the six-ton ambulance to a stop in front of the building. He armed the kill switch and bailed out. He stormed up the stairs, taking them two at a time. Todd hit the floor of the apartment unconscious as Jeff reached the landing on the second floor. Blood poured from his nose and mouth. A large, hulking man stood over him.

“Member down! Member down! Twenty-seven needs assistance! One sixty-three Essex!”

“All units in the area of one-six-three Essex Street in Melrose! Twenty-seven needs assistance! Melrose and State Police to be notified! One-six-three Essex Street, second floor in Melrose. Twenty-seven needs assistance!”

The man’s attention shifted to Jeff, drawn by the radio noise. Steven snarled and moved towards him; he stepped over Todd, fists clenching. Jeff closed the gap, ducking under a huge right. He struck the man in the gut; it was like punching a tree. Jeff saw stars when the man’s backhanded swipe connected on his right cheek.

Jeff staggered but didn’t go down. He turned back to Steven. Jeff punched him three times in the right bicep. Steven’s left jab struck him in the ear, making it ring. Jeff backed away. Steven’s right arm hung uselessly, but it wouldn’t be like that for long. Jeff needed to end this.

Steven bellowed and charged at him. He swung his left fist at Jeff again. Jeff blocked it, twisted and smashed his forearm down on Steven’s. A loud <snap> echoed through the apartment when Steven’s arm broke near the elbow, the bones pushing through the skin. He screamed while Jeff kicked at his right knee, hobbling him. Jeff swept Steven’s legs and he crashed to the ground. Jeff pounced and smashed him in the jaw with a forearm. Steven fell to the floor unconscious.

Jeff looked around the apartment. A woman in her thirties lay in a heap near the couch; her face was bloody and her left eye was swollen shut. A pre-teen boy’s head poked around a door frame; the boy stepped into view holding an arm which was clearly broken.

“Miss? Can you walk? We’ve gotta get out of here.” She nodded, beckoning the boy to her. Jeff checked his partner; Todd was still unconscious with a broken nose and split lips. Jeff hoisted him over his shoulders in a fireman’s carry and turned back to the woman and boy. “Ready?”

Jeff squeezed carefully through the door and made his way down the stairs. A mob wearing mix of navy, French blue and dark green uniforms piled through the door to the stairs and froze when they caught sight of the four descending them. Officers and paramedics behind them tried to force their way in.

“I need a C-spine setup and a stretcher!” Jeff barked and the crowd parted. The crew from Paramedic Fourteen scrambled to get the stretcher and backboard ready. Jeff laid Todd down and gave Fourteen a report; another paramedic truck cared for the woman and her son. He watched as Fourteen and Twenty-two threaded their way though the sea of cruisers, ambulances and fire trucks with their patients.


“How’d he look like he was doing?” Sean Brophy asked.

“Todd? He looked like he was doing okay for someone with a smashed nose and broken jaw. Physically, at least. He wouldn’t look at me at first; he’s mad at himself over what he did, embarrassed.”

“Well ... it was kinda stupid...”

“You’re right, Sean, but I can also see why he did it. I didn’t wait for the police either, if you remember?”

“You went in after your partner. You had to go in; he didn’t. You remember what you taught me when we started working together, right?” Jeff nodded while Sean repeated the lesson. “‘It’s you, your partner, then everybody else.’ And you’d do it again.”

“In a heartbeat.”

“There you go. Even still the company will make sure he’s taken care of; morally what’s the right answer for the choice he had to make? Keiko must have had some choice words for you when she saw your face that night?”

Jeff rolled his eyes. “After a long pause she asked me how I’d forgotten the lesson on ducking. She cleaned my clock that day! Honestly, that sparring session helped me keep my head clear when he connected.”

“It’s a lovely shade of blackish-purple your face is sporting. Any word from the DA’s office?”

“I heard this morning: no charges. The ADA handling the case told his boss he felt I was acting in defense of Todd, which I was, and the DA agreed immediately. If I could have just grabbed Todd and gotten out of there, I would have, but that guy wouldn’t have given us that chance; he’d have killed us both.”

“The city manager wants us, meaning Brophy management, in his office tomorrow. It doesn’t sound like it’ll be a friendly meeting to me; Dad isn’t getting that vibe but I’m insisting on corporate counsel being there. I’d like you to come also.”

Here we go again, Jeff thought. “In uniform or a suit?”

“Uniform.”

The next afternoon four members of Brophy EMS walked into the Melrose City Manager’s office. The manager was at his desk; to his right were his police and fire chiefs. After the introductions the team from Brophy was invited to sit in the chairs facing the desk.

“Mr. Brophy, how is your employee faring after this incident?” the city manager asked.

“A broken nose and jaw along with a mild concussion, Mr. D’Agostino. Thank you for asking.”

“I’d ask after your other employee but I can see he’s joined us here today.” Paul D’Agostino looked at Jeff but offered no nod of acknowledgement. “Honestly, I’m troubled by this incident, Mr. Brophy.”

“Todd Riikonen, the paramedic with the concussion, has admitted that he made an improper choice in entering the home on Essex Street but that he did so with the intent to rescue the residents inside from the situation.”

“My concern is not with his actions, Mr. Brophy, but with the actions of the other member of that ambulance crew.” He looked pointedly at Jeff.

“Mr. Knox acted to protect his partner and extricate him from the danger he was in. He used the minimum force required to accomplish that task.”

“I believe he crossed the line.”

“And the DA’s office has taken a different view. There will be no charges filed against Mr. Knox.” The police and fire chiefs looked relieved; the city manager looked otherwise.

“Regardless, I’ll have to ask that he no longer be assigned to any ambulance serving the City of Melrose.”

“Mr. Knox was not assigned to the primary Melrose unit that night but to one covering from Malden; the primary unit was on another call. My company cannot guarantee he won’t be on an ambulance from another city which is sent to cover.”

“Then I want him fired.” All eyes in the room turned to the city manager. His police and fire chief looked stunned. Sean and Jeff’s faces were neutral but Seamus’ was angry.

“No,” Seamus said.

“I beg your pardon?”

“I said ‘no.’ Mr. Knox acted in defense of his partner and will not be fired.”

“Then I shall be forced to act to have Brophy EMS removed as the EMS provider for the city. Your contract will expire at the end of next August, will it not?”

“No, it will not.”

Paul D’Agostino gave Seamus a thin smile. “I have a copy of the contract here; it clearly states the end date of the contract period is August 31, 1997.”

“That may be what is printed there, but the contract will now end earlier. Brophy EMS will exercise the exit clause in that contract and terminate service to the City of Melrose within ninety days, due to its blatant disregard for the welfare of our employees.” The three officials from Melrose were stunned. “Mr. Knox, as has been previously stated, acted in defense of his partner who, may I point out, had been knocked unconscious by a known domestic abuser and lay helpless before him. If Mr. Knox could have removed his partner from the scene unmolested he would have, but the assailant would not have given him that chance.”

Seamus Brophy stood. He placed his hands on the manager’s desk and leaned over it. “My business relies on the hard work, the loyalty, of the men and women I have working for me; they work hard for me because they know I have their backs. Jeff Knox has shown consistently over the years that he embodies the caring and dedication needed to go out into the streets day after day. He treats his patients with dignity and respect, which is more than I can say for his treatment by this city. To my company, to me, this contract is worth the defense of a single employee who did the right thing. You will receive written notification of our intent to terminate our relationship with your city as soon as our legal team can draft such a document. Good day, sir.”

“Mr. Brophy, let’s not be hasty...”

“I said GOOD DAY!”

Seamus led his team out of the manager’s office and out to the car without a word. He thanked his corporate counsel; the man said he’d get right to work on the appropriate paperwork and walked to his own car. Seamus headed back to Brophy’s Malden headquarters with Sean and Jeff; not a word was spoken for five minutes.

“Mr. Brophy...” Jeff started to say from the back seat.

“Don’t start with that ‘Mr. Brophy’ shit again, Jeff! You’ve been calling me ‘Seamus’ for a year now, and that’s what you’re going to keep calling me!”

“Yes, sir...”

“That’s even worse! Jeff, I am not mad at you so don’t make me get mad at you! That little bastard tried to go off on some little power trip and I wasn’t having it. Some asshole who doesn’t know my business doesn’t get to tell me how to run it! He’s lucky I didn’t go all Marine DI on him!”

“Still, Seamus...”

“Jeff, dollars to donuts Melrose’s City Council fires that dumbass within the week. Did you see the faces of the fire and police chiefs? I hear nothing but good things from them about the job you guys do there. Hell, the police chief called the other day to apologize for his guys not being able to get to Essex Street faster! Those two won’t let the city shoot themselves in the foot like that.”

“But you were bluffing, right? About the contract?”

“Not one goddamn bit. I’ll pull the rug out from under them if the city tries to play those games, mark my words. I meant every word about the people who work for me, Jeff, and about you. You had split seconds to make decisions in that house. That asshole didn’t give you any breathing room before he forced you to react; he’d already proven violent more than once that night. You acted appropriately and I will go to the wall to defend one of my employees who acts appropriately.”


“Your forms are unaffected by your injuries, Jeffrey; they continue to improve.”

Jeff nodded in thanks as he crossed to the sparring gear. “Thanks, Keiko. I’d like to push a little bit harder on the sparring today if we could, though?” He placed his sparring helmet on and turned, holding his gloves along with Keiko’s equipment.

“We cannot spar together any longer, Jeffrey.”

“Huh? What’s wrong? Why can’t we spar?”

“My doctor advises against it at this time.”

Jeff felt the blood drain from his face. “Keiko? What’s wrong?”

“Nothing is ‘wrong, ‘ Jeffrey. My condition will correct itself within seven months and we will be able to spar again shortly thereafter.” Jeff stared at his wife in a mix of fear and confusion. “Jeffrey, the doctor who recommended we not spar for now is my obstetrician. My beloved, I am pregnant.”

Jeff didn’t react for a second or two. When he did he hooted loud enough to hurt her ears; he threw the sparring gear into the air. She watched the dense red padding arc through the air and began to laugh. Her laughter rose in volume when Jeff picked her up and twirled her around, shouting for joy. She was soon being kissed soundly by him.

“When?” he asked wearing a wide smile.

“I spoke to the doctor the other day, while you were at work. We need to schedule a time for an ultrasound.”

“No, when?”

“The middle or end of March.”

“When do we tell our families?”

“Your parents are coming over for your birthday tomorrow night, we will tell them then. We will call mine after that.”

“I love you, Keiko.”

“And I you, Jeffrey.” Her eyebrow rose when he pulled off her gi’s black belt. “Jeffrey, what are you doing?” she laughed.

“We’re going to celebrate.”


“Hey, Jeff. How’s it going today?”

“I’m good, Sean, thanks. I saw in the news that we got the Arlington contract?”

“Yep. Dad’s pretty happy about that one. You know, expanding our coverage area and all that.”

“January First start date, I heard?”

“Correct again, sir. You gonna put in for a shift there, or something?”

“No. I thought I’d put in for one of the schedule slots that has Medford shifts along with Malden shifts, though.”

“Medford? Not Melrose?”

“Yeah, no. The guys on the street aren’t the issue, but the new city manager doesn’t sound like a fan and I don’t need to poke that bear. No, I’ve heard really good things about working in Medford from folks that have worked there; it seems it would go well with my shifts in Malden, schedule-wise, too. I’m sure Arlington would be a good place to work as well, but maybe down the road.”

“You’ve been working as a medic here for a year and here in total for three. That puts you in the middle of the pack for medic seniority; factor in the people who don’t want to switch and you’ve got a fair shot at getting those shifts. How’s Keiko?”

“It’s not general knowledge outside our families yet, Sean, but she’s pregnant.”

Pregnant? Hey, that’s great! When is she due?”

“Middle to end of March. Should I tell her to expect a phone call from Beth tonight?”

“Probably a safe bet. Are you guys going to wait to see if it’s a boy or girl?”

“I’d like to, but we’ll see what happens. As long as things progress normally we’ll wait, but if there are any curve balls we might ask. Not sure yet.”


“Thanks for coming in today, Keiko. We’re closed tomorrow so Don and I can get down to the Cape for Labor Day before traffic gets too crazy.”

“Not at all, Dr. Nuno. Jeffrey and I are not leaving town for the holiday, so it was no imposition.”

“Normally, we have an initial ultrasound at six to eight weeks, then another one at three to four months; from what you’ve told me, Keiko, it sounds like you’re right in that six to eight week window. Let’s head over to the ultrasound room.”

Five minutes later the ultrasound tech slid a wide transducer through the gel smeared across Keiko’s belly. Marie Nuno pointed out certain landmarks to the young couple while the exam was underway, saying she didn’t see anything out of the ordinary. There was a happy, comforting smile on her face until she turned on the sound so they could hear the baby’s heartbeat.

“What... ?” Dr. Nuno muttered softly.

“Is that... ?” the tech asked.

“What?” Jeff asked, growing concerned. “What’s wrong?”

“Try aiming a little higher in the uterus,” Marie said to the tech.

“Doc, what’s wrong?” Jeff repeated. Keiko squeezed his hand.

“Do either of you have a history of twins in your family?”

“Twins, Doctor?” Keiko asked. “Not that we are aware of; why do you ask?”

“Because of this little one right here,” she replied, pointing to the screen. “You’re having twins. Fraternal, from the look of things. Congratulations!”

Keiko and Jeff were stunned. Dr. Nuno completed her evaluation of the second baby, pronouncing both fetuses to be right on track in their development. The future parents mumbled their thanks to their obstetrician and walked out to their car. Jeff wrapped his wife in his arms while they leaned against it.

“Overachiever,” he muttered to her.

“Me, Jeffrey? I could say the same to you!”

“This changes the calculus on a few things now doesn’t it?”

“With regard to our home, no; the bedroom we had identified as the nursery can easily handle two of everything should we need it to. I will certainly need another vehicle; you likely will as well. We will need another pair of names also.”

“Our accounts can handle the extra costs. The tech stocks in our portfolio have been performing well; the return on those will easily pay for everything without having to touch the amount we originally invested.”

“Seeing you in a minivan will be interesting.”

“Keep dreaming, sister.”

“Dr. Nuno said she wanted to see me again in two months. Perhaps we might be able to learn the sex of the children then?”

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